"Style" is an English equivalent of the Italian word "stilo."
Specifically, the Italian word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article "il" means "the." Its singular indefinite article "un, uno" means "a, one."
The pronunciation is "STEE-loh."
"In the style of" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase "nel stilo di."Specifically, the word "nel" combines the preposition "in" with the masculine singular definite article "il" to mean "in the." The masculine noun "stilo" means "style." The preposition "di" means "of."The pronunciation is "nehl STEE-loh dee."
"Nel stilo di" is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "in the style of."Specifically, the word "nel" combines the preposition "in" and the masculine singular definite article "il" to mean "in the." The masculine noun "stilo" means "style." The preposition "di" means "of."The pronunciation is "nehl STEE-loh dee."
Amore stilo italiano is a literal Italian equivalent of the English phrase "love Italian style."Specifically, the masculine noun amore is "love." The masculine noun stilo means "style." The masculine adjective italiano translates as "Italian."The pronunciation will be "a-MO-rey STEE-lo EE-ta-LYA-no" in Italian.
"Stilo" is an Italian equivalent of the English word "style."Specifically, the Italian word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "lo" ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is "un, uno" ("a, one").The pronunciation is "STEE-loh."
"Boobs" in English mean tette in Italian.
"Sandwich" in English is panino in Italian.
Dopo is an Italian equivalent of the English word "after." The word also can be used as an adjective to mean "following" or "next" and as an adverb and preposition to mean "beyond" in English. The pronunciation will be "DO-po" in Pisan Italian.
"Blonde brownies" in English mean i blondies in Italian.
No, David Beckham is not Italian. He is originally from England.
"idee" is the Italian word for "ideas" but in the singular, the Italian word is the same as the English one. I mean English - Italian = idea - idea :) get it?
No, the words 'Italian' and 'Sicilian' don't mean the same in English. Neither do they mean the same thing in Italian or Sicilian. In Italian, the words are 'italiano' and 'siciliano'. The word 'italian' refers to a native of the Italian peninsula. The word 'siciliano' refers to an Italian who's native to the island of Sicily.
Not English - try Italian.